1. Galadriel says:

    Since watching Doctor Who, I actually think that Whit is a Time Lord and the Imagination Station is his TARDIS–and his nemesis is Regis Blackgaard, who regenerated into The Chairman of NovaCom.

    • Alassiel says:

      I laughed when I read that. I have the same theory about Ms. Frizzle and the Magic School Bus.  Her Time Lord name is probably The Teacher.

  2. LaShawn says:

    Alas! They didn’t mention SuperBook or the Flying House, which was both time traveling and anime to boot.

  3. They didn’t mention SuperBook or the Flying House, which was both time traveling and anime to boot.

    These series were done under the organization of Pat Robertson. Even with some animated full-frontal nudity. (Source: The Flying House revisionist Palm Sunday episode.) Humph. And they say Christian artists aren’t inventive and pioneering.

    My other heroes are:

    1. Prof. Peeper and Gizmo, not to mention the titular Superbook (or “Timebook”).
    2. Professor Bumble and his faithful robot SIR.
    3. Eugene Meltsner, from Adventures in Odyssey. Suddenly I realize I always wanted to be him. Eugene episodes were the best. So were any and all of the Imagination Station episodes, especially which played with the technology.
  4. D.M. Dutcher says:

    Psalty is pushing it. That’s like saying Barney’s spec-fic because he’s a talking dinosaur. He’s the only one I remember though; I think I was too old for Odyssey and never cared to see McGee. 

  5. Yes, but Psalty had a time machine. And sentient Disneyesque animal critters.

    There was little “realism” in the cassette episodes. Ergo: close enough to fantasy.

  6. Ah. I grew up with Psalty and the Cooper Kids Adventure series. What memories.

  7. Kessie says:

    We never got into Psalty. GT and the Halo Express was our poison–two kids and their angelic guardians. And the angel rock band.
     
    I adored Odyssey, but after Hal Smith died, the show kind of lost me. That’s around the same time the original creators started leaving, like Chuck Bolte and Paul McCusker. It never seemed to have the same sparkle after that. I know that’s unfair to the last ten years or so of episodes that I’ve missed, though.

    • G.T.! Illustrated as a little boy(?!), but with that odd memorable “scratchy” voice and quirky laugh. I still hear catchy ’80s music alongside so many Bible verses in the NIV.

What say you?